Price increases continued to moderate faster in the Twin Cities last month compared with the U.S. as a whole.
The consumer price index, an often-used measure of inflation, eased to 5.1% in January on a year-over-year basis for the Minneapolis-St. Paul region, according to data released Tuesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That is down from 5.3% in November.
By comparison, the price index for the U.S. rose by 6.4% over the year. That was down from 6.5% in December and from 7.1% in November, and was the seventh-straight year-over-year slowdown.
The regional data are published every other month while the U.S. figures are released monthly. Of the dozen metro areas for which the federal government reported inflation data on Tuesday, the Twin Cities had the second smallest year-over-year increase, with the Washington, D.C., area having the lowest at 4.4%.
"We have been seeing slower inflation growth both in Minneapolis and in the Midwest region, especially compared to the South and the West," said Tyler Schipper, associate professor of economics at the University of St. Thomas.
He pointed to housing as being one big reason why, with shelter costs (which includes rent) going up more nationally and being a bigger contributor to overall U.S. inflation.
Over the past 12 months, food prices in the Twin Cities rose 12.2%, with items such as cereal and baked goods jumping 17%. Meanwhile, energy prices increased 7.6%, largely because of a bump in natural gas prices. All other items excluding those two categories rose 3.8% over the year.
Used car and truck prices was one of the few categories to show a decline, of 12.4%, over the year.